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Series 3

Episode One: Patching blast injuries in the ruins of Raqqa

18 April 2018

"We heard stories of men returning to their homes in Raqqa to prepare them for their families. They’d enter the house, trip a time-delayed device without knowing it, and then, three days later when their whole family had arrived, the device would go off."

In this episode, we hear from three MSF medics who have been working in the Syrian city of Raqqa: doctors Javid Abdelmoneim and Pippa Pett, and nurse Michael Shek.

A former stronghold of the so-called Islamic State, Raqqa is littered with improvised explosive devices and remnants of war that are causing dire consequences for people returning to the city.

Series 2

Episode Eight: The hidden costs of war

14 July 2017

"I exchanged glances with my Iraqi medical colleague and it was immediately clear that we were both thinking the same thing. Four months! How could it be possible that this poor child has been like this for four months?"

Nina Rajani, a doctor from London, has just returned from Iraq. On this week's episode, Nina explains what it took to treat people caught between the vicious spiral of violent conflict and poor health.

Episode Seven: From conflict zones to curtain shops

23 June 2017

"I used to envy the delegates that walked into our office in London when I worked for another humanitarian organisation in their HQ. I used to brief them on things I knew so little about and inside was secretly wishing I was them. Now I am them and what I hadn't taken into consideration is that at a certain point it becomes hard to get out."

In the latest episode of our Everyday Emergency podcast, we speak to Emily Gilbert. An MSF project coordinator from London, Emily has spent her entire career working in conflict zones.

Whether she’s in the Middle East or Central Africa, Emily’s main roles are to make sure her team is safe and that the project she’s managing runs as smoothly as possible. With a typical MSF project having 4-12 international and up to 200 local staff, it's by no means an easy job.

In this episode, Emily also discusses a common problem many humanitarian workers deal with: balancing working in far-flung places and maintaining relationships back home.

Episode Six: How we rescued 560 people on the Mediterranean

1 June 2017

"You’ve got to be in a really, really awful situation to think ‘yes, I’m going to put my nine-month old child onto this rubber boat, because that’s the best option to me at the moment’."

During his time on the ship as a communications officer, Nick captured the sounds of life on board - including the rescue of 560 people from four inflatable rubber boats.

That rescue would also be the last of Dr Conor Kenny's three month assignment on Aquarius. Listen to the last episode for Conor's account of that assignment.

Episode Five: Return to the disaster in Idomeni

18 May 2017

Our podcast host Nick Owen is on board Aquarius this week, undertaking search and rescue operations with Dr Conor Kenny. The pair will capture a live Mediterranean rescue for the next episode in this series.

For now, we're looking back at an episode from series one: where Conor speaks about his time in Greece, and a disastrous eviction of thousands of refugees in Idomeni village.

Episode Four: I searched 70 refugee camps to find my mother

4 May 2017

"I travelled city by city, camp by camp, to find my mother. Still, no news. And then, I came to France."

On this week's episode of our Everyday Emergency podcast, we meet Besh, a Kurdish asylum seeker living in London, UK. Besh and his family lived peacefully in a village just outside Mosul, Iraq, raising livestock on their farm. In June 2014, everything changed.

The so-called Islamic State captured Mosul. The Iraqi army withdrew. And the militant group were headed straight for their village.

Fleeing for their lives, Besh, his mother, and young brothers were forced to head for Turkey. After crossing the sea to Greece, the police separated the boys from their mother. What followed is an extraordinary journey across 70 camps in Europe, by a young man determined to reunite his family.

Episode Three: "The letter that changed me"

20 April 2017

"I wasn't prepared. It left a scar. It was the first time I was exposed to so much avoidable death."

Five months into his second assignment with MSF responding to the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, the job was taking it’s toll on Javid.

But just before things would get worse, a patient handed him a letter that changed his outlook and gave him the strength to carry on.

Episode Two: "Good luck, my sister"

6 April 2017

"It feels a bit vulnerable admitting this to strangers, but I always cry after a rescue. Always. The gravity of the hurt, pain, sorrow, hope, and resilience of the 400 plus people we safely transported to Italy over the last 72 hours overwhelms me."

In the second episode of this series of Everday Emergency, we meet Courtney Bercan - an MSF nurse who worked on one of our search and rescue ships in the Mediterranean.

We invited Courtney to sit down with us and discuss her time on the ship, and hear about a patient whose story still haunts her.

Episode One: "My fight isn't over" | World TB Day 2017

24 March 2017

"One, two, three… 12 last pills. In the past two-and-a-half years, I have had to swallow close to 15,000 tablets. What started off as regular tuberculosis, morphed to a stronger resistance and after five months, I was put on multidrug-resistant TB drugs. As if this killer disease was on a rampage for my family, my three-year-old younger child, John, became very ill too..."

Elizabeth Wangeci's story is a remarkable one. Against the odds, Elizabeth, from Nairobi, was the first person to survive one of the deadliest forms of drug-resistant tuberculosis in Kenya.

In the first episode of the second series of Everyday Emergency, and on World TB Day 2017, we speak to Elizabeth nearly one year after being cured. We also hear from Mark Sherlock, an MSF TB doctor who works not far from Elizabeth in Nairobi.

Series 1

Special Episode | The Kunduz Hospital attack: A doctor's story

3 October 2016

The 3rd of October will be remembered as one of the darkest days in MSF's history.

On this day in 2015, US airstrikes killed 42 people and destroyed the MSF trauma hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan. In this special episode of Everyday Emergency, we look back on the attack one year on with Dr Kass Thomas, an intensive care specialist from Australia, who was at the hospital the night of the attack.

If you feel compelled to act after listening to this post, visit our #NotATarget page to find out more.

Episode Ten: The disaster in Idomeni

19 August 2016

"Immediately, my mind takes me back to Idomeni: stark images of a grown dishevelled man in his 40s in a colourful stripy button down shirt, black suit trousers and mismatching runners, devoid of dignity, pleading in desperation for help through a barbed wire fence..."

In the final episode of the first series of Everyday Emergency, we meet Conor Kenny, an Irish doctor who has just returned from his first mission.

Conor spent four months in Greece, working with refugees who had travelled as far as the village of Idomeni on the Greek/Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonian border.

He discusses seeing women and children being teargassed and hit with rubber bullets, and the eviction of the camp that forced thousands of people to find another route through Europe.

Episode Nine: I had to turn people away from the world's largest Ebola centre

5 August 2016

"He pleaded with me to take his teenage daughter, saying that while he knew we couldn’t save her life, at least we could save the rest of his family from her. At that point I had to go behind one of the tents to cry. I wasn’t ashamed of my tears but I knew I had to stay strong for my colleagues – if we all started crying, we’d be in trouble."

Episode Eight: A patient as stubborn as me

22 July 2016

"Before me lay a small boy. His terrified eyes watched every move I made, but the rest of him was stiff, with his back arched and his hands balled into fists. His mouth was frozen in a joker-like grin and his jaw was tightly clenched."

Earlier in 2016, paediatric nurse Johanna Bosowski embarked on her first mission with MSF to Agok, in northern South Sudan.

Working on the neonatal ward, she encountered a young patient with a disease she had never seen in the UK before. In the eigth episode of Everyday Emergency, Johanna talks about how she treats her first ever tetanus patient, and how she coped running the ward.

Episode Seven: "All I need is a metre of rope"

7 July 2016

"Twenty months of treatment? Fifteen to 16 tablets a day, right? No, I would rather die. All I need is a metre of rope."

Despite ranking alongside HIV as the leading cause of death by infectious disease, the global response to TB has been found wanting.

Because the drugs used in standard treatments have not changed in over 40 years, they are becoming less and less effective due to increasingly high levels of resistance from the bacterium.

In the seventh episode of Everyday Emergency, Australian doctor Amrita Ronnachit discusses her time battling TB in Uzbekistan, and the case of one patient who struggled with his treatment.

Episode Six: Precious baby

24 June 2016

"Does she just have incredibly bad luck in a setting with extremely poor access to obstetric care? Maybe the three previous stillbirths were unrelated. So many women here have stillbirths or neonatal deaths, and there is no consistent reason. Regardless, I have to do everything I can to ensure that this child survives."

In the sixth episode of Everyday Emergency we meet US gynaecologist Veronica Ades, who has returned from her third MSF mission.

In Precious Baby, Veronica describes the precarious situation for expecting mothers in the city of Aweil, South Sudan.

You can read more from Veronica about her time in South Sudan, as well as her other mission in Jordan, on the MSF blog.

Episode Five: "One day, 52 senseless deaths"

10 June 2016

"My thoughts immediately turned to anybody still below deck on the wooden boat. I proceeded there directly, clambering down through a small hatch at the rear. There was enough light from the small hatches, and my headlamp, to make out a tragic tangle of bodies. At that point training cut in and emotions took a back seat, though the adrenaline flowed. Moving forward I quickly checked each person still above the incoming water, sloshing around in the bottom of the boat, for signs of life. All were dead."

In our fifth episode we meet Canadian doctor Simon Bryant who last year spent his summer on MSF and MOAS's search and rescue ship, the Phoenix.

You can read more from Simon about his time on the search and rescue vessel on the MSF Moving Stories blog.

Episode Four: The darkest hour

27 May 2016

"The last 13 years of my life have been dedicated towards turning me into a finely tuned and rational life-saving machine. I am not supposed to form emotional attachments to my patients or hold them passively and powerless while they die. I’m supposed to secure their airways, stabilise their blood pressures and attach them to life-support machines. But this is the reality in which I find myself: my favourite patient lies dying in my arms."

In our fourth episode we meet British doctor Emily Wise who, in 2013, travelled to Uzbekistan - a country with particularly high drug-resistant tuberculosis rates.

In 'The Darkest Hour', Emily describes in heartbreaking detail the final minutes of a TB patient's life.

Episode Three: Clémentine

13 May 2016

In our third episode we meet Sandra Smiley, a Canadian MSF communications officer who spent 2015 in Kinshasa, the capital of Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

Sandra spent her time in Congo by travelling across the country and relaying to the world news of under-reported health crises, meeting patients like Clémentine. In our chat, we discover Sandra has made an inspiring career move. You can read more from Sandra about her time in DRC on her blog.

Episode Two: Saving lives amid chaos

13 May 2016

In our second episode we meet Scottish nurse Michael Shek from Dumfries.

Michael has recently returned from his second mission in South Sudan, the world's youngest country in the midst of a civil war. In this podcast, we hear Michael's story of his time in Bentiu, and he tells us about an incredible moment saving the life of a boy and his uncle at 10,000 feet. You can read Michael's story and see pictures of his time in Bentiu here.

Episode One: The first 24-hour shift

13 May 2016

In our very first episode we meet Benjamin Black, an obstetrician from London.